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The Destiny of the Soul: A Critical History of the Doctrine of a Future Life

Chapter 4 BARBARIAN NOTIONS OF A FUTURE LIFE.

Word Count: 7821    |    Released on: 01/12/2017

earth, it will be best to begin by presenting, in a rapid series, some sketches of the conceits of those uncivilized tribes who did not so far as our knowledge r

and there is a general similarity of funeral usages. Early travellers tell us that the Bushmen conceived the soul to be immortal, and as impalpable as a shadow, and that they were much afraid of the return of deceased spirits to haunt them. They were accustomed to pray to their departed countrymen not to molest them, b

ggestion of the mind, is interpreted, with unquestioning credence, as a visit from the dead, a whisper from a departed soul. If a man wakes up with pains in his bones or muscles, it is because his spirit has wandered abroad in the night and been flogged by some other spirit. On certain occasions the whole com

n Africa

ice, palm oil, beef, and rum: it was supposed the ghost of the sable monarch would come back and consume these articles. The African tribes, where their notions have not been modified by Christian or by Mohammedan teachings, a

star. The Pleiades are seven New Zealand chiefs, brothers, who were slain together in battle and are now fixed in the sky, one eye of each, in the shape of a star, being the only part of them that is visible. It has been observed that the mythological doctrine of the glittering host of heaven being an assemblage of the departed heroes of earth never received a more ingenious version.3 Certainly it is a magnificent piece of insular egotism. It is noticeable here that, in the Norse mythology, Thor, having slain Thiasse, the

d to the land where he has gone. Love me, and make haste to strangle me, that I may overtake him."4 Departing souls go to the tribunal of Ndengei, who either receives them into bliss, or sends them back, as ghosts, to haunt the scenes of their former existence, or distributes them as food to devils, or imprisons them for a period and then dooms them to annihil

tions of the New Z

nowl.: The New Zeal

the U. S. Exploring Exp

at him, and ran by while the

ouls of the chiefs were led, by a god whose name denotes the "eyeball of the sun," to a life in the heavens, while plebeian souls went down to Akea, a lugubrious underground abode. Some thought spirits were destroyed in this realm of darkness; others, t

is lower paradise is but a beautified Kamtschatka, freed from discommoding hardships and cleansed of tormenting Cossacks and Russians. They have no hell for the rectification of the present wrong relations of virtue and misery, vice and happiness. The only distinction they appear to make is that all who in Kamtschatka are poor, and have few small and weak

pains and horrors. The good, that is, the courageous and skilful, those who have endured severe hardships and mastered many seals, passing through this first residence, find that the other mansions regularly improve. They finally reach an abode of perfect satisfaction, far beneath the storms of the sea, where the sun is n

stuous seas an

s placed a low

good Spirit Torngarsuk held his reign in a happy and eternal summer. The wizards, who pre

of the Sandwic

ermischte Philosophisc

cal Hist. of Mank

fixed the site of paradise in the sky, and regarded the aurora boreal

nking he those spirits soon should join Who there,

pinched with hunger and plied with torments. All agreed in looking for another state of existence, where, unde

s in North America. In all these cases the supposition is probably erroneous, as we think for the following reasons. In the first place, the idea of a resurrection of the body is either a late conception of the associative imagination, or else a doctrine connected with a speculative theory of recurring epochs in the destiny of the world; and it is in both instances too subtle and elaborate for an uncultivated people. Secondly, in none of the cases referred to has any reliable evidence been given of the actual existence of the belief in question. It has merely been inferred, by persons to whose minds the doctrine was previously familiar, from phenomena by no means necessarily implying it. For example, a recent author ascribes to the Feejees the belief that there

Greenland

l Andree,

nquest of Peru,

ds of the Western

ry, &c. of the Indian

s unbelief was the cause of their embalming.14 Garcilaso de la Vega, in his "Royal Commentaries of the Peruvian Incas," says that when he asked some Peruvians why they took so great care to preserve in the cemeteries of the dead the nails and hair which had been cut off, they replied that in the day of resurrection the dead would come forth with whatever of thei

who had been sacrificed to Tlaloc invisibly came and assisted in the ceremonies. The ultimate heaven was reserved for warriors who bravely fell in battle, for women who died in labor, for those offered up in the temples of the gods, and for a few others. These passed immediately to the house of the sun, their chief god, whom they accompanied for a term of years, with songs, dances, and revelry, in his circuit around the sky. Then, animating the forms of birds of gay plumage, they lived as beautiful songsters among the flowers, now on earth, now in heaven, at their pleasure.16 It was the Mexican custom to dress the dead man in the garb appropriated

pent Symbol in

Moral History of the

k ii.

story of Mexico,

nquest of Mexic

d. sec

deceased at his burial, and imploring him to stay in his own place and not come to distress them. Their funeral customs, too, from one extremity of the continent to the other, were very much alike. Those who have reported their opinions to us, from the earliest Jesuit missionaries to the latest investigators of their mental characteristics, con

Indian, whose

uds and hears h

Science never

solar walk

ure to his fai

topp'd hill, an

ld in depth of

sland in the

ents his na

el's wing, no

dmitted to th

dog shall bea

s destiny, are implied in their funeral rites, which, as already stated, we

procure game with to live on while pursuing his way to the land of spirits, the blissful regions of Ha wah ne u.20 Several Indian nations, instead of burying the food, suspended it above the grave, and renewed it from time to time. Some writers have explained this custom by the hypothesis of an Indian belief in two s

lker von America, xiii. haupts.:

Onondaga, v

der Amerikanischen U

aten path westward, and enters a country abounding with all that an Indian covets. On the borders of this blessed land, in a long glade, he finds his relatives, for many generations back, gathered to welcome him.23 The Chippewas, and several other important tribes, always kin

y such hea

ves of tho

ight of fur

ght of pots

rits faint

them foo

hem fire to

s the spiri

of ghosts

nely night

hen the dead

, as night

on the grav

oul upon i

e about in d

standing before the entrance to wide blue plains. Leaving his body there, he embarked in a white stone canoe to cross a lake. He saw the souls of wicked Indians sinking in the lake; but the good gained an elysian shore, where all was warmth, beauty, ease, and eternal youth, and where the air was food. The Master of Breath sent him back, but promised that he might

y, &c. of the Indian T

part ii

v. p. 64; pa

ong of Hiawatha,

, Indian in hi

night to go and examine his traps, he saw one all on fire,

uggles. Some say the latter are drowned; others, that they sink up to their chins in the water, where they pass eternity in vain desires to attain the alluring land on which they gaze.28 Even this notion may be a modification consequent upon European influence. At all events, it is subordinate in force and only occasional in occurrence. For the most part, in the Indian faith mercy swallows up the other attributes of the Great Spirit. The Indian dies without fear, lookin

njoin the offering of a cake to the ghosts of ancestors back to the third generation. The Greeks were wont to pour wine, oil, milk, and blood into canals made in the graves of their dead. The early Christians adopted these "Feasts of the Dead" as Augustine and Tertullian call them from the heathen, and Celebrated them over the graves of their martyrs and of their other deceased friends. Such customs as these among savages like the Shillooks or the Choctaws are usually supposed to imply the belief that the souls of the deceased remain about the places of sepulture and physica

of United Brethren to N.

igwam, p. 202. History, &c. of

tory of Indian Trib

. pp. 4

as a beacon to the straying ghost. Again, the Indian mother, losing a nursing infant, spurts some of her milk into the fire, that the little spirit may not want for nutriment on its solitary path.31 Plato approvingly quotes Hesiod's statement that the souls of noble men become guardia

the Arru Islands, when a man dies, leads his relatives to assemble and destroy whatever he has left, which, in another form, causes the Papist to offer burning candles, wreaths, and crosses, and to recite prayers, before the shrines of the dead saints, which, in still another form, moved Albert Durer to place all the pretty playthings of his child in the coffin and bury them with it, this same sentiment, in its undefined spontaneous workings, impelled the Peruvian to embalm his dead, the Blackfoot to inter his brave's hunting equipments with him, and the Cherokee squaw to hang fresh food above the totem on her husband's grave post. What should we think if we could foresee that, a thousand years hence, when the present doctrines and customs of France and America are forgotten, some antiquary, seeking the re

North Ameri

ic, book

r, New Zeal

Geschichte der Religio

ne, although, as is well known, there is, among the most ignorant persons, scarcely any deliberate

lings. It would be absurd to suppose this song an incantation to secure the repose of the buried brave, and the stones thrown to prevent his rising; yet it would not be more incredible or more remote from the facts than many a commonly current interpretation of barbarian usages. An amusing instance o

starts, there is no end to the extravagant conjectures and visions it bodies forth. Destitute of philosophical definitions, totally unacquainted with critical distinctions or analytic reflection, absurd notions, sober convictions, dim dreams, and sharp perceptions run confusedly together in the minds of savages. There is to them no clear and permanent demarcation between rational thoughts and crazy fancies. Now, no phenomenon can strike more deeply or work more powerfully in human nature, stirring up the exploring activities of intellect and imagination, than the event of death, with its bereaving stroke and prophetic appeal. Accordingly, we should expect to find among uncultivated nations, as we actually do, a vast med

vol. ii. Squier's Aboriginal M

and to present still further specimens o

suspended the bow and arrows of a deceased Papuan above his grave, and conceived him as emerging from beneath every night to go a hunting.38 The fisherman on the coast of Lapland was interred in a boat, and a flint and combustibles were given him to light him along the dark cavernous passage he was to traverse. The Dyaks of Borneo believe that every one whose head they can get possession of here will in the future state be their servant: consequently, they make a business of "head hunting," accumulating the ghastly visages of their victims in their huts.39 The Caribs have a sort of sensual paradise for the "brave and virtuous," where, it is promised, they shall enjoy the sublimated experience of all their earthly satisfactions; but the "degenerate and cowardly" are threatened with eternal banishment beyond the mountains, where they shall be tasked and driven as slaves by their enemies.40 The Hispaniolians locate their elysium in

rees of Amer

, Hist. &c par

The Papua

e Eastern S

of the West Indi

id. c

r, Patago

American Indian

ot imply any believed doctrine, in our sense of the term, but is plainly a spontaneous transference

ed his dreams into a journey up the side of Atna. They fancied that if they died they should immediately live again in their fatherland. They committed suicide in great numbers. At last, when other means had failed to check this epidemic of self destruction, a cunning overseer brought them r

e air above their fog draped mountains. They promised rewards for nothing but valor, and threatened punishments for nothing but cowardice; and even of these they speak obscurely. Nothing is said of an under world. They supposed the ghosts at death floated upward naturally, true children of the mist, and dwelt forever in the air, where they spent an inane existence,

rough his form, and his voice was like the sound of a distant stream. Dim and in tears he stood, and stretched his pale hand over the hero. Faintly he raised his feeble voice, like the gale of the reedy Lego. 'My ghost, O'Connal, is on my native hills, but my corse is on the sands of Ullin. Thou shalt never talk with Crugal nor fi

unspeculative faiths, the vapory form, the echoless motion

hte der Religionen,

location of the spirit world in the lower clouds, are stamped by emphatic climatic peculiarities, whos

mprehensive statements there is, directly related to the matter, and worthy of separate illustration, a curious action of the mind, which has been very extensively experienced and fertile of results. It is a peculiar example of the unconscious impartation of objective existence to mental ideas. With the death of the body the man does not cease to live in the remembrance, imagination, and heart of his surviving friends. By an unphilosophical confusion, this internal image is credited as an external existence. The dead pass from their customary ha

ers were thought, when destroyed, to leave impressions of what had been written on them. The custom of burning or burying things with the dead probably arose, in some cases at least, from the supposition that every object has its mancs. The obolus for Charon, the cake of honey for Cerberus, the shadows of these articles would be borne and used by the shadow of the dead man. Leonidas

d man's plain, The rider

Mela, De Orbi

eek Anthology, in Bo

t says, that Odin himself had declared that whatsoever was burned or buried with the dead accompanied them to his palace.48 Before the Mohammedan era, on the death of an Arab, the finest camel he had owned was tied to a stake beside his grave, and left to expire of hunger over the body of his master, in order that, in the region into which death had introduced him, he should be supplied with his usual bearer.49 The Chinese who surpass all other people in the offerings and worship paid at the sepulchres of their ancestors make little paper houses, fill them with images of furniture, utensils, domestics, and all the app

ef of savages in the ghosts of clubs, arrows, sandals, and provisions. The disembodied soul of the philosopher, an eternal idea, turns from the empty illusions of matter to nourish itself w

oose, must have

have to go witho

tion doctrine

ate of gormand

ematics in an amusing manner. Bishop Berkeley, bantered on his idealism by Halley, ret

matia and Montene

n Antiquit

story of Turkey,

China,

of Greenland, book

ted quantities! It may be added here that, according to the teachings of physiological psy

of memory, the lights and groups of poetry, the crude germs of metaphysical speculation, the deposits of the inter action of human experience and

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Open
1 Chapter 1 THEORIES OF THE SOUL'S ORIGIN.2 Chapter 2 HISTORY OF DEATH.3 Chapter 3 GROUNDS OF THE BELIEF IN A FUTURE LIFE.4 Chapter 4 BARBARIAN NOTIONS OF A FUTURE LIFE.5 Chapter 5 DRUIDIC DOCTRINE OF A FUTURE LIFE.6 Chapter 6 SCANDINAVIAN DOCTRINE OF A FUTURE LIFE.7 Chapter 7 ETRUSCAN DOCTRINE OF A FUTURE LIFE.8 Chapter 8 EGYPTIAN DOCTRINE OF A FUTURE LIFE.9 Chapter 9 BRAHMANIC AND BUDDHIST DOCTRINE OF A FUTURE LIFE.10 Chapter 10 PERSIAN DOCTRINE OF A FUTURE LIFE.11 Chapter 11 HEBREW DOCTRINE OF A FUTURE LIFE.12 Chapter 12 RABBINICAL DOCTRINE OF A FUTURE LIFE.13 Chapter 13 GREEK AND ROMAN DOCTRINE OF A FUTURE LIFE.14 Chapter 14 MOHAMMEDAN DOCTRINE OF A FUTURE LIFE.15 Chapter 15 PETER'S DOCTRINE OF A FUTURE LIFE.16 Chapter 16 DOCTRINE OF A FUTURE LIFE IN THE EPISTLE TO THE HEBREWS.17 Chapter 17 DOCTRINE OF A FUTURE LIFE IN THE APOCALYPSE.18 Chapter 18 PAUL'S DOCTRINE OF A FUTURE LIFE.19 Chapter 19 JOHN'S DOCTRINE OF A FUTURE LIFE.20 Chapter 20 CHRIST'S TEACHINGS CONCERNING THE FUTURE LIFE.21 Chapter 21 RESURRECTION OF CHRIST.22 Chapter 22 PATRISTIC DOCTRINE OF A FUTURE LIFE.23 Chapter 23 MEDIAVAL DOCTRINE OF A FUTURE LIFE.24 Chapter 24 DOCTRINE OF A FUTURE LIFE IN THE ANCIENT MYSTERIES.25 Chapter 25 METEMPSYCHOSIS; OR, TRANSMIGRATION OF SOULS.26 Chapter 26 RESURRECTION OF THE FLESH.27 Chapter 27 DOCTRINE OF FUTURE PUNISHMENT; OR, CRITICAL HISTORY OF THE IDEA OF A HELL.28 Chapter 28 THE FIVE THEORETIC MODES OF SALVATION.29 Chapter 29 RECOGNITION OF FRIENDS IN A FUTURE LIFE.30 Chapter 30 LOCAL FATE OF MAN IN THE ASTRONOMIC UNIVERSE.31 Chapter 31 CRITICAL HISTORY OF DISBELIEF IN A FUTURE LIFE.32 Chapter 32 THE END OF THE WORLD.33 Chapter 33 THE DAY OF JUDGMENT.34 Chapter 34 THE MYTHOLOGICAL HELL AND THE TRUE ONE, OR THE LAW OF PERDITION.35 Chapter 35 THE GATES OF HEAVEN; OR, THE LAW OF SALVATION IN ALL WORLDS.36 Chapter 36 RESUME HOW THE QUESTION OF IMMORTALITY NOW STANDS.37 Chapter 37 THE TRANSIENT AND THE PERMANENT IN THE DESTINY OF MAN.